Nexus 9 review
Pros
- Big, sharp screen
- Powerful GPU
- Good battery life
Cons
- Not as swish as an iPad
- Backlight leakage
- Slightly disappointing stereo speakers
Key Features: 8.9-inch 4:3 IPS LCD 2048 x 1536 screen;
8MP rear camera with LED flash, 1.6MP front camera;
Nvidia Tegra K1 processor with 2GB RAM;
Metal trimmed with soft-touch plastic back;
Android 5.0 Lollipop;
BoomSound stereo speakers;
425g, 7.9mm thick
Manufacturer: HTC
What is the Nexus 9?
The Nexus 9 is Google’s new lead tablet, the first to launch with Android 5.0 Lollipop and the first of the Nexus troupe to use a 4:3 screen rather than a widescreen one.
People hoping for a tablet with which to replace their Nexus 7 may be slightly disappointed by the price, though. At £319, it’s not the market-defining bargain that the earlier Nexus was.
Given the little issues here and there, it’s not as complete or coherent a device as the iPad Air 2.
There’s a slight spark of magic missing that means — at £320 at least —
it probably won’t go down in history as an all-time classic.
However,
what’s commendable is the direction it demonstrates. 8-inch
non-widescreen tablets like this will no longer be ‘non-canon’
third-party oddities, and that’s a very good thing. We don’t think it’ll
take the Nexus 9 18 month to be topped for value, and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4 is already a fairly compelling alternative. But for a larger device, the Nexus 9 offers up a solid ‘go-to’ standard.
Nexus 9: Design
The
Nexus 9 sets itself up for criticism. Its style and shape are pretty
similar to the iPad Air 2, a departure for the Nexus series.
This in itself is a good move. Larger tablets feel a lot more natural when they adopt a less-widescreen aspect: both the Nexus 7 and Nexus 10 are 16:10 ratio, the Nexus 9 is 4:3.
This in itself is a good move. Larger tablets feel a lot more natural when they adopt a less-widescreen aspect: both the Nexus 7 and Nexus 10 are 16:10 ratio, the Nexus 9 is 4:3.
However,
the Nexus 9 doesn’t offer quite as impressive build quality as an iPad,
and when the design similarities are so clear, it’s hard not to compare
the two directly despite their differing platforms.
You may
bring up price difference (£80), but also consider that the
still-pretty-great first-gen iPad Air costs now exactly the same amount
as the Nexus 9, £319. To explain, let’s look a little closer at the
Nexus 9’s hardware design.
Much like the Nexus 7, the Nexus 9 uses a plastic back cover, one that that’s firmly strapped into a metal frame that runs around the tablet. It’s a fairly innocuous design, and despite using a very mild soft-touch textured finish, it still feels conspicuously like plastic.
Much like the Nexus 7, the Nexus 9 uses a plastic back cover, one that that’s firmly strapped into a metal frame that runs around the tablet. It’s a fairly innocuous design, and despite using a very mild soft-touch textured finish, it still feels conspicuously like plastic.
We’re
also slightly disappointed with some of the finishing elements, given
how much more expensive this tablet is compared to the Nexus 7. The
plastic rear flexes at certain points, even producing a slightly
disconcerting clicking noise towards the top of the tablet, and there’s a
roughness to the metal frame as it pokes ever-so-slightly above the
screen glass.
The volume keys too feel a little cheap, the action slightly misjudged and shallow, even if they are metal. This may be us simply grasping for explanations, but HTC’s relative inexperience may be to blame: it makes the Nexus 9 and hasn’t released a tablet since the 2011 HTC Flyer.
The volume keys too feel a little cheap, the action slightly misjudged and shallow, even if they are metal. This may be us simply grasping for explanations, but HTC’s relative inexperience may be to blame: it makes the Nexus 9 and hasn’t released a tablet since the 2011 HTC Flyer.
While we have no particular worries about
the longevity of the Nexus 9 – it doesn’t feel poorly made, just not all
that well finished – it seems like a bit of a middleweight contender
for what is meant to be the standard-setting Android tablet flagship.
We’ll see other elements that suffer from this sort of vibe later on.
It’s not just the iPad Air 2 the Nexus 9 needs to compete with, either. The Nexus 9 is 7.9mm thick and 425g (Wi-Fi), a load heftier than the 6.6mm thick, 294g Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4 – the Samsung is smaller, but still a good size. The Nexus 9 is arguably just not leading the pack in the way it really should be.
However,
cast away those comparisons and in real-life use the Nexus 9 is pretty
good. The non-widescreen aspect is great, there’s just enough side bezel
to rest your thumb on, and it’s very comfortable to use, especially if
you have both hands spare or are sitting down.
Like the iPad Air 2, which is a somewhat-similar weight, you can use it one-handed for a while without discomfort, but it’s far off the feather-lightness of the 8.4-inch Samsung or the iPad Mini 2/3 (we recommend the former, by the way).
Just like the Nexus 7, the Nexus 9 leaves out a microSD card slot. There are 16GB and 32GB versions of the tablet, with a slightly disappointing £80 gap between the two. That’s even more than Apple charges: you get a bump up to the 64GB iPad Air 2 for £80. Who’d have thought Google would charge even more than Apple’s often notoriously-pricey upgrades?
Like the iPad Air 2, which is a somewhat-similar weight, you can use it one-handed for a while without discomfort, but it’s far off the feather-lightness of the 8.4-inch Samsung or the iPad Mini 2/3 (we recommend the former, by the way).
Just like the Nexus 7, the Nexus 9 leaves out a microSD card slot. There are 16GB and 32GB versions of the tablet, with a slightly disappointing £80 gap between the two. That’s even more than Apple charges: you get a bump up to the 64GB iPad Air 2 for £80. Who’d have thought Google would charge even more than Apple’s often notoriously-pricey upgrades?
Step
back a minute, and we can see the factors behind the Nexus 9’s failing
to offer the market-defining package we’re after. It doesn’t offer
class-leading value or class-leading design, and doesn’t have all the
geek-friendly features that might excuse these two points.
The hardware spec list is relatively simple too. There’s no IR transmitter, for example – something found on the Galaxy Tab S 8.4. If this is all sounding terribly negative, you need to understand it in with context of the weight of expectation laid on the Nexus 9. It’s not just meant to be ‘an’ Android tablet, it’s meant to be ‘the’ Android tablet.
The hardware spec list is relatively simple too. There’s no IR transmitter, for example – something found on the Galaxy Tab S 8.4. If this is all sounding terribly negative, you need to understand it in with context of the weight of expectation laid on the Nexus 9. It’s not just meant to be ‘an’ Android tablet, it’s meant to be ‘the’ Android tablet.
So far: good, not superb.
Google
is also to offer a Nexus 9 folio keyboard case, which comes with solid
keyboard action even if typing on it can feel a little cramped. It’s not
cheap at £110, but bumps up the tablet’s potential as a portable
productivity tool.